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The Talk.Origins Archive: Exploring the Creation/Evolution Controversy

Feedback for August 2002

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Well, you're missing a couple of things...but that's OK, lots of people don't quite grasp them, so it's no point against you.

One thing is that sometimes biology works exactly as you describe in your example, adding something in development that isn't wanted in the final form, so an extra step is added to knock it off. An example that comes to mind (you can read more about it in Peter Lawrence's The Making of a Fly) is the way Drosophila neatly packs a spatial determinant protein called hunchback into her eggs, which if left in place, causes serious abnormalities in early development...so she also localizes a bit of another protein called nanos that specifically destroys the misplaced hunchback. You'd think it would be simpler to just not bother adding the maternal hunchback in the first place, but that's the way evolution often works, cobbling together something that works, even if it's not the best way.

The other thing is that I think the General Anti-Creationism FAQ where you got that quote is a bit too terse and vague on that point. We do NOT think that embryos repeat their evolutionary history in development. What has been observed is that all embryos go through initial steps in development in which they simply produce lots of cells and then separate out primitive tissues that migrate in gastrulation; these steps vary superficially in different groups. These generic early steps then all converge on a simple, general form that is conserved within all the embryos within a phylum. Vertebrates, for instance, build a central notochord, put a strip of nervous tissue on top of it, and add a few other features, like pharyngeal arches and a tail. Subsequent development then adds details that vary in different species.

It's not recapitulating its history. The embryo is building a general plan first, then sculpting it into specific forms. Think of it as a kind of rough sketch that gets refined with time, and all organisms that have a similar body plan are rather indistinguishable at that rough sketch stage.

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Response: By asking astrophysicists and astronomers where the material came from. They often answer: other stars.

Hint: the origins of the earth is not a matter for evolutionary biology.

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I would laugh, too. I don't know who to laugh at, though -- I don't believe that crop circles are made by aliens, and I don't know of any of my fellow evolutionists who believe that they are. Your comment here is simply bizarre and unrelated to evolutionary thinking. I could just as well argue that creationists are wrong because they believe that teddy bears are possessed by demons...when no creationist that I know of has made such a claim.

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From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
Response: This creationist canard is demolished in this archive's The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System FAQ, an excellent work by Tim Thompson.
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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: Thanks for the enthusiastic feedback. We aim to bring out the child in all of us (no, I'm not going to get into pop-psych).

As to your questions:

Lamarck believed in the continuous spontaneous generation of the very simplest life forms at all times, and that each of these would then ascend a ladder of complexity or grades of organisation. Darwin, to the contrary, suggested in the Origin that there were a "few forms, or ... one" at the beginning of life and that all subsequent evolution occurs by diversifying those forms. In a letter he supposed that there might have been a single form in a "warm pond", but this was speculation only.

Darwin's conservative approach has, again, proven to be inadvertently prescient. There are suggestions that there is no single root to the Tree of Life, but that early on genes were exchanged rather promiscuously. However, one thing Darwin also noted is that should a new abiogenetic event occur, the products would most likely quickly be gobbled up by the more efficient already-evolved lifeforms, and we'd never see them.

As to the origins of the universe and evolution, if we leave to one side all kinds of grandiose Cosmic Evolution scenarios and philosophies, the main impact of the universe's history on biological evolution seems to lie in the processes that generated heavier elements (including carbon, nitrogen and so forth) and thus allowed the formation of complex organic molecules in space and on earth. I understand that there is a growing consensus that a lot of the initial organic material was deposited on earth by coments during the Great Bombardment.

However, if the universe was formed in two seconds shortly before the first life appeared, while that would cause trouble for cosmologists, it would not affect evolutionary biology.

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Response: First it would be more accurate to say that natural selection is the main (but not the only) mechanism driving evolution rather than evolution is based on it. It is possible for evolution (descent with modification) to occur without natural selection, through genetic drift for example. Also natural selection is usually not about a literal “fight for survival” (at least not between organisms). I say this because it is often mischaracterized as literal combat. Though this does occur in nature it is far from the only expression of natural selection. Nonviolent competition for resources and cooperation are probably more common.

As to your question about “nonliving substances”, the short answer is that natural selection doesn’t apply to them; though there are selective processes that can occur in nonliving matter, pebble sorting on a beach for example. For natural selection in the Darwinian sense to occur you have to have some sort of self-replicating “organism” (or proto-organism), which makes occasional mistakes in the process of making copies of it’s self.

I don’t know why you would think that natural selection should apply to nonliving things unless you’ve been confused by anti-evolutionists frequent conflation of all mainstream science with evolutionary biology.

While it is true that physicists and astronomers might speak of the “evolution” of matter or stars they are using the term simply to describe a process of change, the details of which being quite different from those involved in biological evolution (descent with modification).

In the case of the heavier elements (heavier that hydrogen & helium) these are thought to have been formed within stars, particularly within supernovas. Perhaps one of the volunteers better versed in the physical sciences can expand on this. Baring this, see the Supernovae, Supernova Remnants and Young Earth Creationism FAQ by Dave Moore for more on this.

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: In addition to Troy's comments, let me discuss briefly the ramifications of selection to the origin of life.

It is often not understood by many people that molecules do not all have the same structure even if their elements are the same. There are many forms of a single molecule that can exist, and in the case of a protein that is 100 atoms long there can be up to 1090 possible shapes formed. Most of them do not get so formed, but the point is that there are many differently shaped versions of the same molecule.

Now, suppose that a molecule is formed in such a way that it naturally falls into a particular shape in the processes of nearly-living chemical reactions, whatever they were. It will have certain properties and these will regulate the rate of the reaction (and hence the rate at which it copies itself), and the efficiency of the "capture" of the raw "food" molecules (the monomers, as they are called), that are needed to continue the reaction. Any variant which can increase either of these two properties in that reaction will tend to get copied more and so "take over" the soup in which they are made.

This is, in effect, a natural selection process on nonliving substances. It will result, if conditions are right, in chemical processes that are more complex, and better "adapted" to the conditions in which they find themselves. I believe that natural selection is an instance of a universal tendency of things that are dynamic and make copies of themselves, whether or not they are "alive".

Although the theory of natural selection is not supposed to apply to the elements themselves, there is a form of selection due to the creation of heavy elements in novas and supernovas that explains why we are made of the elements we are.

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Author of: The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System
Response: I appreciate that Mr. Casselman has made an effort to understand my article. What is actually happening here is that in the very early history of the earth-moon system, the recession rate of the moon is very fast, orders of magnitude faster than it is now (easiest to see in the paper from my reference list: Evolution of the Earth-moon system, Touma & Wisdom, Astronomical Journal 108(5): 1943-1961, November 1994).

The reason for this is that the very early earth is much more fluid than it is now, as if the whole planet were a kind of ocean. It is easily deformed, and that deformation is what drives the moon's recession. Today, the solid body tides of the much less pliable earth are not that important, while the deformable, fluid part of the earth is the global ocean. By the time the earth is a billion years old, that situation is long gone already.

But while the flexible early earth, more or less round, was evenly deformable in all directions, the ocean is not. Its deformation is contaminated by continents, which determine the shapes of the seas by their positions. If the size of the body of water in an ocean or sea is approximately the same as the size of the wave induced in the water by the moving moon, then a condition of "resonance" will set in, causing the interaction of moon and ocean to be much larger than it would have been, were the ocean a different size.

That condition of resonance is at work today, hence the current recession rate is anomalously fast, compared to times when the oceans did not have such a favorable shape and size. Hence, when you look at the "Paleontological Evidence" section of my article, there are recession rates only a third of what we see now. That's because there is no favorable resonance at that time, and the earth is by then far too old for the fast rates found only in its infancy.

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Response: It is generally unprofitable and perhaps counterproductive to try to change the mind of someone who doesn't want it changed. If your approach is adversarial, they are likely to stop listening. A good strategy may be to pursue your own interest in science and share with your friends some of the awe and wonder that you find. If they belittle the scientific findings, simply say something to the effect that reality is more interesting than their opinion of it. That probably still won't change their minds, but it will keep you from going crazy with frustration.

(A good source for interesting up-to-date science stories is "Nature Science Update", a weekly email service available from www.nature.com.)

They may be receptive to stories from people who share more of their views, such as the personal stories on Glenn Morton's website.

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Response: Responding to this message would perhaps be more productive if you had given an actual argument against any of the evidence contained in this rather large website. There's not much that can be said to "I don't believe it and everyone will soon agree with me" other than, well, "not bloody likely". The evidence for common descent is very, very strong. The fact that you personally don't believe it doesn't really affect reality much, especially in light of the fact that your letter contained not a single substantive argument concerning any evidence at all. As far as your claim that you haven't seen any creationists "go to the evo. side", the fact that you haven't seen any does not mean they don't exist. In fact, one of the big problems that the creationist movement has historically had in sponsoring students in scientific fields is that so often they have changed their position once they actually got to college and began to study the evidence up close. It took decades of sponsoring creationist students in graduate geology programs before they had one emerge from that field of study with their creationist beliefs unaltered. There are many examples of this found in Ronald Numbers' voluminous history of the creationist movement, The Creationists. Among the contributors to this site are many people who were once creationists and whose position altered as a result of actually studying the evidence. I'm one example. Glenn Morton is probably the best example, since he was an active creationist author before his work as a geophysicist for an oil company brought him into daily contact with an enormous amount of evidence that showed him that the earth is not young, nor was there a global flood. Glenn is still a committed Christian; I am not. But we are both examples of creationists who had their positions changed after years of study of the evidence.
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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
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Eldredge and Gould based "punctuated equilibria" on Ernst Mayr's theory of allopatric speciation of peripheral isolates. The PE FAQ (linked above) goes into this in some detail.

Wesley

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Response: I suspect you are confusing radiometric dating with radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon dating is generally used for organic objects less than 50,000 years old, but other radiometric techniques, such as Potassium/Argon, the most often used technique, are only good for longer periods of time because of the long half lives of the elements.
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Response: Your local police department. Don't call 911 (this is not an emergency), but just look it up in your phone book. They'll have a policeman stop by who will probably look at them and tell you they're leftovers from a barbecue 20 years ago.
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Response: In the case of apples and other fruits, the advantage is dispersal. Animals eat the fruit and discard or deficate the seeds at some distance from the original tree. Thus the seeds get spread over a large area. Without the edible fruit (or some other dispersal mechanism, such as small winged seeds that catch the wind), the seeds would all end up under the original tree, where few if any of them would be able to grow.

Some plants produce honeydew or small edible bodies that attract ants. The ants then defend the plants against other herbivores.

In other cases, such as asparagus sprouts, the parts are edible simply because the plants have not produced defenses against herbivores such as us. Most defenses are metabolically costly, so plants could grow more rapidly without them. In some cases, the tradeoff favors growing rapidly at the risk of being eaten.

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Response: According to the Tree of Life web site, the closest living clade to the order Primates is the order Scandentia, the tree shrews. Primates and tree shrews are then related to Chiroptera (bats) and Dermoptera (colugos or flying lemurs).

As bats can be traced in the fossil record as far back as the Eocene (54-34 Mya), the split from primate precursors must have occurred at least that far back, perhaps in the Paleocene (67-54 Mya). See sections 1B and 2A of the Transitional Vertebrate Fossils FAQ.

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Author of: What is Creationism?
Response: Evolution and the Bible are not mutually exclusive, as Christians on talk.origins and elsewhere have proved repeatedly. Your version of Christianity may not allow evolution, but that's your problem, and yours only. You may not understand how the two are compatible, and you may not like it, but to say that they are incompatible is to bear false witness, nothing less. You don't get to speak for all Christians.

Evolution is based on evidence from the earth itself, including evidence that is a heck of a lot less ambiguous than anything in a human language. Christianity, as I understand it, says God had something to do with the creation of the earth, and therefore He is responsible for that evidence. If evolution is false, then God cannot be trusted. And if you can't trust God, then what good is the Bible?

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Author of: The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System
Response: 1) The first law is not a problem, for two reasons. First, the first law, like all the other laws of physics, is operative only inside the universe. But the origin of the universe is necessarily outside the universe, and there is no reason to believe that the beginning of the universe should be constrained by any law of physics. Second, the idea that the universe has a unique beginning is overplayed. The singularity at the beginning of the universe is an artifact of the theory of general relativity, and is not indicitive of any physically real "singularity". More general cosmological theories, which include quantum mechanics with general relativity, can (and will) dispense with the singularity, and the "beginning" altogether.

2) The suns energy is not decreasing, the data to which you allude do not exist. Theory requires the sun to be slowly expanding & brightening, though much too slowly for us to observe. On shorter time scales, the sun's brightness varies more or less periodically.

3) The integration of probability with entropy is fundamental and necessary in physics. The attempt to argue that this should not be done is naive at best. As for Borel's law, it does not apply, since it deals with random probabilities, whereas we are dealing with systematic events with skewed probabilities. Also, see the Borel's Law FAQ.

4) Not at all true, not even close. No stretch of the imagination can justify such a silly notion as "nothing X time X chance = life", and no aspect of any evolutionary theory does so. Creationists, on the other hand, regularly invent the claim that it does, since it frees them from the necessity of thinking about what evolution really is.

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Consider this our little intelligence test.

Talk.origins does not endorse any flat earth theory. There is a page in the archive that illustrates one of the more ludicrous ideas held by some people, that the earth is flat. It has a highlighted disclaimer as the very first paragraph in the article. It says: "This article is not advocating flat-earth theory, nor is it attempting to show that most or even many creationists believe in a flat Earth. It simply illustrates that there are still real people who interpret the Bible so literally that they think Earth is flat. The Talk.Origins Archive does not support or endorse the views of the International Flat Earth Society. Clicking the "Feedback" button above sends feedback to the Talk.Origins Archive, not the International Flat Earth Society. Please do not send us feedback to tell us that the Earth is a sphere; we are already aware of this fact."

Consider this our little intelligence test. It's got one question, and we give you the answer right up front. It's an extraordinarily simple test.

Now consider this: you've failed it.

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Response: We do look forward to your FAQ-by-FAQ demolitions. Post them in the newsgroup first, so that we can make sure they are clear and concise, and will therefore convince as many people as possible. If they are well done, we could perhaps replace our own with them. Of course, you'd have to take into account the factual data presented there, and not merely repeat the old canards our present FAQs deal with.

Have fun.

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: Well honestly, no, not in the light of the evidence. We do link to as many creationist sites as we can, but they don't do a good job of arguing for it, so why should we?

At one point in the history of science, creation was a viable scientific explanation. That ceased to be the case around 1800, and ceased to be even possible around 1858. As much as we would like to be "even-handed", honesty and science comes first. Sorry.

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